On November 26th, TD Bank, N.A. notified the New Hampshire Attorney General that on October 27, computer equipment containing names, addresses, dates of birth, social security numbers, bank account numbers and balances was removed without authorization from two TD Banknorth branches that were being consolidated into TD Bank Stores in Hillsdale and Park Ridge, New…
Over 2,220 North Pacific Group employees affected by stolen computers
A burglary at the Portland, Oregon offices of North Pacific Group over the recent Thanksgiving weekend resulted in the theft of several laptops and other computer equipment. As described in a letter to the New Hampshire Attorney General dated December 23l, two of the stolen computers: … stored files containing names, addresses, Social Security numbers,…
ANNOUNCE: Breach news moving to DataBreaches.net
Happy New Year! Starting today, all healthcare-related breach news stories will be posted to our new companion web site, DataBreaches.net. For your convenience, you can subscribe to the news feed from that site.
Happy New Year and Welcome!
Whether you’ve migrated over from PogoWasRight.org, PHIprivacy.net, or just stumbled across this site, welcome and Happy New Year! This site is devoted to reported breaches involving PII or PHI. PogoWasRight.org and PHIprivacy.net will continue to cover discussions of privacy breaches as well as other aspects of privacy news, but if you are looking for reports…
Company faces privacy probe into health records found on Ottawa street
Ontario’s privacy commissioner is launching an investigation into how patients’ sensitive medical records ended up being blown around a downtown Ottawa street Wednesday. Ann Cavoukian said she alerted CML Healthcare immediately after hearing that an Ottawa man had found the papers on O’Connor Street, outside a medical centre housing a CML medical imaging clinic….
NM: Legislature to take another look at digital medical records
Trip Jennings reports about legislation dealing with EMRs: […] But with changes in how medicine is practiced, there are also unresolved questions, in particular as they relate to privacy, says Bob Mayer, the chief information officer at the New Mexico Department of Health. And Mayer and others hope that state lawmakers will pass a law…